science buzz

Switching between subjective and objective modes is the essence of the scientific modus operandi. Not many people seem to appreciate that. Science is all about riding two horses, maybe not in concert, but certainly alternately - and knowing when to switch from one to the other.

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

I've taken an artist's impression from the English Heritage website of how Stonehenge may have looked shortly after completion, circa 2500BC, with those mighty but mysterious sarsen-stone lintels in place. The latter have been colour coded - yellow for the TOPS of the 5 arch-like trilithons, and pink for approx half of the TOPS of surrounding stone circle.

I've added a token seagull (sorry it's upside down!). Why? Because what you see is a bird's eye view of Stonehenge that conveys a crucial aspect of that unique and stunning structure, one that is not immediately obvious to a tourist or other visitor viewing from ground level.

I believe that Stonehenge was created as a "pre-crematorium", where the newly deceased were first subject to what is euphemistically termed "sky burial", aka excarnation, aka de-fleshing. (Or, as I prefer to call it, AFS (avian-facilitated skeletonization) - as still practiced in Tibet and elsewhere.

More to follow.

Addendum: March 16, 2018
Sorry to repeat myself, but I've decided to add the same image you see above as an addendum to ALL my Stonehenge postings (some 24 in all, here and on my specialist Stonehenge site). Why not – since it’s my considered answer to the ‘mystery’ of the monument’s peculiar architecture, the conclusion to some 6 years of deliberation?
Reminder*

I say Stonehenge was designed as a giant bird perch, a ceremonial monument dedicated to ‘sky burial’, i.e. soul release from mortal remains to the heavens via AFS (avian-facilitated skeletonization, considered the height of fashion (and practicality) in Neolithic-era 2500BC! The stripped remains were then cremated, so an apt description of Stonehenge might, as previously suggested, be PRE-CREMATORIUM.

Here's a series of photographs showing 3D renderings of a range of images - starting with simple ones created on a computer with no 3D history, and ending with ones that do. Given there's no obvious difference in the 3D response - all of them responding to pre-programmed software that simply converts image density (no matter how acquired) to height on an entirely imaginary third dimension, i.e. height on a new z axis above the original xy plane - I hope this posting will dispel once and for all the claim that the response of the Turin Shroud body image in 3D-rendering computer programs is in any way unique, or different in any important respects from that of other imprints, or even paintings. One can speculate as to the reasons for the differences in image density on the TS body image. While one may or may not suppose the original and/or 3D-rendered image to have been derived from a 3D subject by one or other mechanism (contact imprinting, some kind of photography) one is not entitled to conclude that the alleged 3D-ness of the enhanced image tells one anything about the 3D-ness of the original subject. Yes, it's more than probable that the 'subject' was 3D, or possibly a bas relief, but did not need to be in order to generate a 3D-response in appropriate 3D-rendering software that has no way of knowing the history of the subject, or knowing the distance between image and subject at the moment of image capture.Evidence? One can make a crude sketch image of the TS body image, and show that it too responds surprisingly well to 3D-rendering software, despite the sketch having no 3D history whatsoever.Summary: 3D rendering sofware simply responds to differences in image density, and tells one NOTHING about the manner in which those differences were acquired, whether by simple contact imprinting or more exotic means that are claimed by some in sindonology.

Saturday, February 11, 2017

Here's a comment that I've just posted to that site. It's "awaiting moderation". I don't expect it to appear (none of the occasional ones sent these last 5 years have done so).

Evidence for authenticity "overwhelming"? Nothing could be further from the truth. The evidence in fact is paltry and usually circumstantial, and even then, inconsistent and fragmentary.

The radiocarbon date coincides with the first appearance of the TWO-FOLD, HEAD-To-HEAD image seen on the Lirey badge, whose date is self-evident from the De Charny coats-of-arms. All that is missing is a coherent narrative for the history and motivation, and one that accounts for what otherwise might seem enigmatic features - but which aren't in reality, once one has torn oneself away from the authenticity narrative.

This investigator has supplied the missing narrative, based on 5 years research and the resulting 'Model 10'. i.e. flour imprinting/thermal development/final water-washing.

The motivation? To simulate what a body imprint in sweat and blood onto Joseph of Arimathea's fine linen might look like 13 centuries later, acquired during TRANSPORT from cross to tomb. The TS was intended to be a whole-body rival to the then-celebrated Veil of Veronica, while based on broadly the same principles of image-acquisition. The negative image, 3D properties etc are exactly what one would expect from a contact image obtained with white flour onto wet linen, as I have repeatedly demonstrated these last 18 months, using 3D figurines as well as my own hand and face.

"Overwhelming" evidence for authenticity you say, when there's a rival narrative that ticks far more boxes? How much longer are you prepared to blind yourself and others to the progress of science?

One could say more, much more about the tunnel vision of the pro-authenticity 'sindonological' mindset, one that will not admit, far less consider contrary thinking, or even acknowledge its existence on their tub-thumping websites.

Such is the way of the world. The world that is intolerant of ideas contrary to one's own. The world that uses the internet to proselytize one's intolerant viewpoint.

Update: Saturday 29th April: here's a copy of my 'cold call' request sent yesterday to the Quekett Microscopical Club (it has a page on its site - see link below- for those wishing to make contact).

Hello all you splendid Queketteers, amateurs and pros alike!

Is there anyone here among you interested in the Turin Shroud? I refer in particular to the ongoing problem as to how it acquired its faint allegedly enigmatic body image (negative, 3D properties, peculiar microscopic properties - like the so-called half-tone effect, colour discontinuities etc)?
Rarely a month goes by without some new mind-blowing scenario - pulsed laser beams, earthquakes, nuclear radiation, Da Vinci dabbling with proto-photography etc etc.

I've been attempting to model the Shroud image for some 5 years, and have settled on what I call Model 10, aka the roasted flour imprint. Yes, it's mundane alongside the ones just listed, but there you go, that's science bizz.

(Smear back of hand with vegetable oil, sprinkle with plain white flour from above, shake off excess flour, drape wet linen over flour-dusted hand, press linen firmly to capture a flour-imprint, suspend linen in oven, roast (approx 180-200 C) till the imprint turns yellow or brown, wash vigorously to remove surface encrustation of Maillard browning products, to be left with an 'enigmatic' faint sepia stain - a negative image of one's hand and fingers that gives a 3D response in ImageJ).

It's the microscopy that proving the problem - the cylindrical 3Dness of linen fibres, their light-refracting properties. Having a bargain-basement microscope that relies on a web cam to capture (blurred!) images on a laptop screen does not help either.

There are two possible solutions:
1. Invest in a better DIY microscope, hoping someone here can give expert advice
2. Seek one or more collaborators who's interested in the Shroud, and willing to be supplied with my Model 10 fibres, maybe with a view to submitting a joint publication to Quekett's own peer-reviewed journal.

I think my Model 10 is the answer, confirming medieval manufacture in accordance with the radiocarbon dating (1260-1390) but if the image fibres fail to match up to the microscopic properties described by STURP and other investigators, then I'm willing to publically concede defeat (that being an occupational hazard of being a scientist, in this instance long-retired).

and to one in particular (Sat July 1, 2017) hat addresses the issue of the "second face", arguably the last of the so-called enigmatic properties to be successfully reproduced by this long-term investigator:

3. Attempts have been made to this day to exclude thermal processes, especially relevant in context of 'appropriate' medieval technology. How? By reference to uv fluorescence. But they are not based on modern experimental data. They are based on the uv fluoresence of the charred edges of the 1532 burn holes, with claim that "all scorches fluorescence under uv". Taking as one's sole reference a centuries-old event involving fire, exceedingly high combustion or carbonization temperatures - ones creating full thickness burns, not mere scorches - is pseudoscience. Scorches incidentally are just one type of thermal change.

Details to come -watch this space.

4. Rogers' starch-coating theory: good inasmuch as it considered the possibility of the image being an added coating, highly superficial, instead of on the linen per se. But why did he stop at purified starch, and proceed to develop a theory as if starch were equivalent to - or easily transformable to - a reducing sugar? Answer: he cited Pliny, 1st century linen technology, betraying (intentionally or otherwise) a pro-authenticity bias that hitherto had been well-concealed. He should have considered a wider range of coatings, including those that could have been deployed in a medieval context.

Details to come. Watch this space.

5. The TS body image responds to computer software programs that map image density as height, ie. creating an imaginary z (vertical) dimension. So what? All imprints and indeed diagrams with no 3D history respond the same - it being a function of the software and the way it re-processes image density - NOT a tool for investigating supposed "encoded 3D information". Yup, starry-eyed hyping - up of the so-called 3D properties of the TS, as if specific for the TS, with inappropriate refs to conventional photographs performing poorly - distortions etc - only to be expected due to lateral lighting, shadowing etc. (focus should be on imprints!).

Details to come. Watch this space.

6. The blood story. First on scene was the pathologist Robert Bucklin MD, publishing and proselytizing his pro-authenticity views way back in the 60s, long before STURP, using the terms "bloodstain" and "wound" interchangeably. NO! There is no evidence on the body image for wounds as distinct from blood, despite explicit claims to the contrary. It is entirely unscientific to describe a bloodstain as a "wound", if there is no independent evidence in the body image for speared, flayed or punctured skin. Even the scourge marks are blood imprints ONLY!

Details to come. Watch this space.7. Failure of STURP to provide convincing evidence for the existence of blood-derived porphyrins - an essential criteria for identifying the stains as derived from blood. Atypical porphyrin spectra, coupled with claims the blood was "too red" were attributed to presence of 'extraordinary levels of bilirubin' with no hard evidence for the presence of ANY bilirubin (which is photochemically unstable and unlikely to survive for months, far less centuries). As with Rogers. the 'bilirubin trauma' hypothesis betrayed a pro-authenticity leaning, unbecoming surely of hands-on researchers willing to investigate (and exclude ) the painting hypothesis while failing to display appropriate scepticism elsewhere.

"Blood-before-image' claim, based on enzymic micro-spotting test was interesting, possibly true, but questionable in the light of other data, notably the so-called half-tone effect which means that blood-coated fibres sampled with sticky-tape from' image areas' cannot be assumed to have been image-bearing fibres, as appears to have been the case. Yup, blind-spot territory ...

Details to come. Watch this space.

8. Returning to the body image (it being the basis of the "enigmatic" tag): there has been indecent haste to exclude contact-imprinting, based on image-intensity data that assumes linen draped loosely over a body, making limited contact. We are quickly asked to consider imaging across air-gaps, of "cloth-body" distance being critical, albeit with peculiar qualfications (max distance of separation not to exceed approx 4 cm for example). That model 'begs the question' i.e. assumes the very thing that is being tested, making for a circular argument. What if the cloth had NOT been draped loosely, as in a 1st century tomb, but pressed firmly against some body features and not others, with conscious control over which parts to imprint, what not. (Consider selective application of imprinting medium also).

Details to come. Watch this space.

9. The assumption that image formation occurred across air gaps, with exclusion of contact imprinting as the sole mechanism, has led to those "radiation" models, associated at least initially by STURP team leader John Jackson. with resort to biblical "resurrection" scenarios that permit a body and /or linen to merge in space ("collapsing cloth" theory"). That has no place in a scientific context, being impossible to put to an experimental test., being merely a highly-coloured interpretation, wishful-thinking some might think.

Details to come. Watch this space.

10. X-ray or gamma-ray imaging? Based on claims that the fingers are 'too boney" or teeth are imaged, with failure to consider, far less to model experimentally, contact-imaging that might well produce such effects through providing something more resistant under the linen than soft tissue.

Details to come. Watch this space.

11. Assumption that the TS represents a "burial shroud", when the biblical record suggests otherwise (namely that Joseph of Arimathea's's linen was intended solely for dignified TRANSPORT of a bloodied, naked or near-naked man from cross to tomb, NOT as final burial shroud.

Here's Joseph of Arimathea's 'clean linen' being used as an improvised means of transport from cross to tomb, with no biblical evidence it was ever used, or intended to be used as final burial shroud. (Di Ciseri, 1883).

Resurrection scenarios for image formation are excluded in the transport-only model if J of A's linen was replaced with 'winding strips' as suggested by the Gospel according to John. Instead, the focus should be on the possibility that the TS was an attempt to recreate what a sweat/blood imprint onto a transport shroud might look like 13 centuries later.

Details to come. Watch this space.

12.Failure to give due consideration or even acknowledge that the TS body image may have been an attempt to simulate a sweat imprint, with bloodstains alone used to implicate a particular and highly revered crucified body , i.e. that of Jesus of Nazareth, with crown of thorns (missing), lance wound, nails wounds etc. (See previous ref to blood that serves as proxy for "wounds" that are otherwise absent from body image).

Details to come. Watch this space.

13. Failure to acknowledge the resources at the disposal of Geoffroi de Charny (France's King John the Good's favourite, both when younger as fellow 100 Year's War combatants and later at the Royal Court ), the king having financially assisted his knight/comrade-in-arms in founding and staffing a so-called private chapel (5 -6 staff!). Those hired clerics may well have been the initiators, possibly even artisans, who originated the idea/project to recreate J of A's transport linen with a simulated sweat/blood imprint. Sindonology rarely considers the crucial and arguably historical role of G de C and his wife, later widow, despite both their individual coats-of-arms appearing on that Lirey pilgrim's souvenir badge (Cluny Museum) indicating a determined effort to attract pilgrims from far and wide ,the latter paying handsomely no doubt for the indulgences etc to be had at the oh-so-fashionable "Shroud" shrine, a rival and closer attraction than the then extant 'Veil of Veronica'.Details to come. Watch this space.14. Italy's Govt. supported ENEA research institute (team-leader Paolo Di Lazzaro): uv laser modelling. No image - mere superficial coloration only. No detailed consideration of likely chromophore - merely refs to cellulose as the target, despite that carbohydrate consisting entirely of stable C- C, C-O and O-H single bonds - i.ie no C=C or other double bonds as is usually the case for molecules that are susceptible to chemical change resulting from absorption of energetic uv radiation.

Sure, the coloration may be superficial, but it's wrong to assume that supernatural radiation is the only means of producing a superfical image, with laser pulses offered optimistically as a weak modern-day proxy (the nearest man-made equivalent you understand).

Let's not mince our words - it was deplorable pseudoscience to make that suggestion, especially when accompanied by refs to philosophy, theology etc and being described as "scientists" in newspaper headlines when in fact the investigators were laser-technologists, said to be working after hours with their Govt-supplied hardware to promote and proselytize their preferred take on scripture.

Summary:

The major failure in this list, 14 points so far? I would nominate that failure to consider the TS as a sweat imprint, whether as I believe simulated (14th century) or even 'authentic' of 1st century origin, there being a clear ambition to link the TS image with supernatural flash of radiation at the instant of biblical resurrection. See banner on Stephen E. Jones 'blog' (manifesto?) for the continuing attempt to make that link, based not on science but PSEUDOSCIENCE.

So where does one go to find the non-derailed still-on-track science, steadily chuffing along, making progress, month after month, year after year? Why, my specialist Shroud site of course, started in early Spring 2012, reporting researches in real time (some 350 postings there and elsewhere to date)!

The cureent model (and indeed I suspect the FINAL one) is what I call the oil/flour thermal-imprinting model. See the above link for details.

I've also added a series of photographs on a recently-resurrected subsidiary Shroud site showing how it's done in 10 simple steps. I used my own hand as 'subject' to show how the imprinting technique works as well if not better with human skin.

One can try it out in one's own home, if one has an hour or two to spare.Postscript: New Year's Eve, 2016: have put up a new posting on my main Shroud site, under the title: "What's Dan Porter up to these days...?". For the last year there's been a Dan-shaped hole in the Shroudie blogosphere!

Monday, May 23, 2016

June 1 update: Yes, there's been a change of title. See end of posting for reasons.

Summary: Nobody had any doubt as to the purpose of "Seahenge" when it was exposed from the Norfolk coastline in 1998. Its instantly acquired nickname showed that its resemblance to that most iconic of stone circles on Salisbury Plain was striking, despite the absence of a "henge", i.e. encircling combination of bank/ditch. So why the coyness about the likely role of Stonehenge and all those other circles of standing stone, given the way they match to varying degrees the "Seahenge" template? So what REALLY was the purpose of those standing stones, assuming they were not mere open-display ornaments boasting a facility in arranging megaliths as if mere Lego bricks, but serving some deeply mysterious, some might say overhyped ritual and symbolism?

Come to think of it, what was the purpose, if any, of those curious and peculiarly British scars on our chalk and limestone plains and downs,the ones we call "henges", rarely if ever stopping to ask why?

There is a simple answer to both those questions, applicable not only to Seahenge and Stone enge, but to at least 8 other stone circles sites, ranging from the Orkneys to the Near East (and probably further afield). The answer is "AFS" (this retired scientist's coy but hopefully provisional abbreviation for the unmentionable e word that sometimes appears briefly in the media, occasionally in full, or more euphemistically referred to as "sky burial").

Late insertion: before reading this posting, one which makes a major claim that standing stone sites were for the most part sites for SKY BURIAL, I would advise my readers to do the following search: (circle standing stones cremated bones)

Note how, entry after entry, there's a reference to "cremated bone" at the base of one or more of the standing stones. Note how the reader - you - are left to assume that is the bone from cremated whole bodies. Kindly do not make that assumption. Instead, assume as I have done, that it's the bones from bodies that have first been defleshed ("excarnated") by scavenger birds (crows, gulls etc) encouraged to use those standing stones as perches. No, it's not pleasant to contemplate, but that's no excuse for totally misreading one's own nation's history, and for myopic archaeologists to bang on endlessly about "ritual landscapes", "megalithic symbolism" etc etc if, in point of fact, circles of standing stones were simply excarnation sites, with cremation performed as end-stage sterilization.

Introduction

The year was
1998. It was described as the most important archaeological discovery in
Britain, at least in the late 20th century, possibly longer (I say
longer).

To those reading this who are less familiar with what was quickly dubbed
“Seahenge” I strongly recommend the BBC’s 1998 Report entitled "Seahenge gives up its secrets" . It began with this amazing image. For many, the BBC reporter and myself included, it made the purpose of Seahenge, located where it was, and when it was (2000BC) immediately obvious.

"Seahenge", aka Holme 1. Image from BBC report, 1999.

The BBC's own teaser of a caption?: "Timber circle was gateway to
the afterlife".

The article starts as follows (my bolding)

A circle of waterlogged wooden posts
found on a remote beach in Norfolk, England, is transforming our knowledge of
Bronze Age culture 4,000 years ago.

The 55 posts, together with the up-turned stump of an oak tree in the middle,
were first spotted on the beach at Holme, near Hunstanton, last November. They
had become exposed after the peat dune covering them was swept away by winter
storms.

Norfolk County Council's
Archaeological Unit identified the find as a Bronze Age timber circle dating
from around 2000 BC - roughly contemporary with Stonehenge. Inevitably, the
circle was dubbed Seahenge.

The article continues:

Left to rot

It is thought timber circles were
used by prehistoric cultures to expose their dead to the elements, birds and
wild animals - a practice called excarnation. The belief was that allowing the
flesh to rot from the bones in the open air would liberate the dead person's
spirit.

There you see the first and probably last use of the e word in this posting. Henceforth it will be replaced by AFS (a term I have coined, short for Avian Facilitated Skeletonization).
Why the coyness? Followers of my string of recent postings, here and my specialist Stonehenge/Silbury Hill site., will be able to recall or guess the reasons. This handy graphic, discovered a few days ago, provides a clue.

No further comment, at least not for now...

Back to the BBC and its perceptive reporting. Yes, it wastes no time in flagging up the unspeakable, in acccording greater value to sense than sensibility (apologies to Jane Austen), unlike vast tracts, some might say deserts, of the mass media. Often that handy euphemism. "sky burial" is substituted instead though maybe conjuring up ghoulish images of Zoroastrian practices centred on vultures and the deceased, which while relevant are hadly appropriate for the UK's scores of iconic sites, standing stones especially. Vultures are a rare sight in the UK. So, that BBC reporter's linkage of timber posts to AFS starting "it is thought" must refer to some very private, rarely articulated thinking, given the dearth of returns one finds from the internet. Try
searching the latter for (timber circles and that "e" word that I call
AFS, or use that sky burial euphemism instead and see how many returns you get, dear
reader - go on, TRY!. Maybe the BBC reporter had the good (?) fortune to meet with some archaeologists or other experts displaying a rare candour to the media re, shhh, AFS.

Already, one
could gently charge the reporter jumbling up the facts, and failing to provide a coherent chain of thought, while not disagreeing with the candidly expressed conclusion that “Seahenge” was a site for some kind of 'you know what'...

Dissecting out the variables (yes, let's be scientific if possible)

Firstly, that BBC report, admirably concise and informative on the key issue though it was, omitted to explain why a timber circle was necessary for excarnation, especially if the
centre piece (i.e. massive upturned tree stump) was simply the place for “leaving a body to rot”. Why the need for the sturdy surrounding posts, all butted up against each other, debarked on one side, not the other etc etc, if all that was needed was a temporary screen for a one-off "AFS" as the item and later reporting implied?

There are different kinds
of excarnation, more specifically “passive excarnation” and yes, one of them
rely on the insalubrious slow rotting of bodies (though usually buried underground for a period if that is the
intention). But would the local wildlife, birds especially, ever allow that to happen in a conspicuous open-air location? Ah, but as the reporter indicated, albeit briefly, subliminally some might say, there’s another, the kind which relies on visits by ground-based scavengers and, ESPECIALLY that third one , colloquially, indeed poetically, known as “sky burial” , one in which the AFS (i.e.defleshing) is performed specifically by visiting birds, either for religious or practical
reasons or both. Byjumbling up
those threeinto the one sentence,
the reader is left to figure out why “timber posts” are needed, if indeed they are needed at all, except maybe as a modesty screen to preserve sensibilities.

The
narrative is excarnation, but specifically by birds. But sadly, one has to say, there's clear evidence in the media of an intruding, obfuscating truth-suppressing counter-narrative. It does not challenge AFS head on, arguing there is no role for excarnation in Neolithic or Bronze Age Britain, at Seahnege or elsewhere, bar one exception spotted recently from Orkney where that bald statement appeared, but without a shred of supporting evidence in the same 118 page pdf document (the link to which may or may not work). Instead, the counter-narrative ignores or banishes the e word entirely, flagging up distracting alternatives instead, creating a verbal smokescreen of waffle, redolent with references to the Neolithic mind, to symbolism, to ritual bla bla , i.e. abstract intangible concepts that are not
capable of either support or refutation, that may at first sight look and sound admirably well-informed, indeed 'scientific' after a fashion. but if the truth be told is pseudoscience (this blogger's hobby horse, indeed bugbear).

The only tangibility is the iconic megaliths themselves, which sadly do not speak for themselves, having no inscriptions or carvings (excluding those fascinating pictograms at the Gobekli Tepe site in Turkey). Instead we have to rely on the current past and present archaeologists, straddling the fuzzy divide between science and the liberal arts, "interpreting" the stones for us, and for the most part, indeed almost without exception, averting their (and our) gaze from the obvious, namely that standing stones (or simpler timber posts) make excellent bird perches, and indeed will be quickly patronised by birds, whether that was the intention or not...

Still more gawping tourists...

One has
already seen the process of de-focusing at work through the unhelpful references to two modes of
excarnation in which timber posts play no obvious role, omitting to mention
that the third – AFS– can indeed play so obvious and
important a role as to make timber posts a signature for “sky burial”. The waters
have been muddied immediately with those references to a body being left to
“rot” when that is clearly not what Seahenge is or was about.

So what is
the precise role or the timber? We are not told. There is no analysis in the
context of sky burial, which is hardly surprising given the way the focus has
been switched to other irrelevant means of passively- effected ("natural") skeletonization.

Nor are we
told why the name “Seahenge” was adopted, but are left to assume, reasonably,
that while it’s nothing to do with timber (ignoring the likelihood that
Stonehenge was “Timberhenge” to begin with, it must be to do with the
geometrical arrangement of a circle of uprights. Stonehenge is a “stone circle”
(with added horseshoes as well) so that’s presumably the common factor. It
can’t be “henge”, i.e. the combination of an outer ditch and bank, since
Seahenge has no such counterpart, so scarcely warrants being christened as
such. Already we are gasping for oxygen, in scientific terms, if you'll pardon the metaphor, as one liberty
– conceptual or semantic – is piled on top of another ,despite the Seahenge site being
recognized quite rightly as of major importance.

The task
today is to dissect these various strands, put them into some kind of logically
consistent and systematic framework, one in which the role of Seahenge can be
seen more clearly, stripped of irrelevancies, and then consider the
implications for the role of its near name-sake, the more illustrious (correctly named) Stonehenge.

In fact I
shan’t stop there. I shall be consider 8 other sites, from Orkneys to the Near East, Anatolia and the Golan Heights, all of which feature “standing stones” and asking: what
can Seahenge tell us about the role of all those sites. I shan’t be giving much
away if I say straightaway that if Seahenge can be quickly identified as a site
for sky burial, specifically AFS, then there can be no logical grounds
for denying the same utilitarian role to all other sites that display similar essential
characteristics. But I shan’t be content with that. An attempt will be made
here to seek scientific as well as logical grounds, though that will require an
examination of the nature and BALANCE of scientific evidence, NEGATIVE as well as positive
(yes, they both have a role to play).

First let’s
ask a simple question.Why did the BBC report appear to accept without quibble
that Seahenge was a site for reducing a body (or bodies) to a skeletal state, notionally releasing the otherwise sequestered immortal soul or spirit, despite the irrelevancies cited? What
is it about Seahenge that makes it virtually self-evident?

First, let’s by
clear about one thing. One is lacking entirely the DIRECT evidence that connects
Seahenge with disposal of the dead – regardless of means. Why? Because there is
no body, nor bodies, nor remains thereof (bones etc) at least not in the
Seahenge discussed thus far, now called Holme 1, due to discovery of a “sister”
site nearby called Holme 2. (That, and its possible ‘burial mound’ which bizarrely looks set
to remain unexcavated for all time (!) may be discussed late in a postscript. ).

So if
there’s no human remains, not even the tiniest fragment of bone, isn’t talk of any kind of defleshing site premature?

At first
sight, the answer to that would appear to be yes, at least to the metaphysical purist. But
science would not make the progress it has if one was over-inhibited in proposing, indeed imputing likely cause-and effect relationships, not if the alternative is a virtual ideas vacuum, bar constant reference to "ritual", "symbolism", the "Neolithic mind" etc etc. The key word is “likely”,
coupled with a never-ending quest to harden up on "likely" until it becomes “with
near certainty” - even if final mathematical-style proof is the proverbial pot at the end
of the rainbow.

The nitty gritty

So let's get started by stating formally why Seahenge IS almost
certainly an excarnation site, despite the absence of a single body or remains
thereof.

Science
operates in different modes. One of them is ‘hypothesising’ or as I prefer to
say ‘model building’ which immediately flags up the need for any hypothesis to be
linked with the making of predictions, the search for and uncovering of new data, the only means by which the truth or
otherwise of the hypothesis can be judged.

Imagine one
were designing a site for AFS, one that would (a) attract birds (b) offer them
a free meal (c) provide a safe and secure perch with short two-way sorties only needed between perch and buffet table and (d) on the subject of safety, create lots of surrounding open space, preferably with a light background, such that prowling ground-based scavengers ad predators with sharp teeth or claws can be quickly
spotted, with time to raise an alarm and/or fly off to safety.

Here’s a
template that would seem to fit the bill (I confess to some working backwards
as well as forwards):

1. A central
flat surface (“table”) on which the food would be displayed prominently,
visible as soon after sunrise as possible if relying on birds that are less
voracious than vultures.

2. Perching
places that are a short distance, ideally equidistant, from the table to which
the birds can retreat after acquiring food in their beaks.

3. The
perching places can be isolated timber posts or stone columns, and for extra
roosting space, bridging lintels could be fitted.

4. That
central outdoor ‘picnic area’, with its ‘Peck ‘n’ Perch facility, must not be
roofed over, i.e open to the sky, and needs some kind of ‘outer zone of
protection’.

5. The
latter could take many forms. It could be marshy of boggy ground to deter
foxes, vermin etc. It could be a high encircling bank of earth or rock. It could
be a deep encircling ditch. It could be a combination of encircling bank and
ditch, i.e. a “henge”. Or it could simply be a timber palisade (stockade?)
formed from timbers that are butted up to offer no gaps for entry. Indeed, the
palisade of butted timbers could double as the perching place, provided the
posts were tall enough to make it difficult for ground-based predators to reach
the perching birds.

(Afterthought: there are so many variants on the initial and evolving template - some 5 already without Stonehenge - that I've decided to place them in an Appendix at the end of tthis posting)

Ring any
bells? Yes, it’s Seahenge, provided one accepts that the original salt marsh,
some distance inland from the present (eroded) coastal location served as the
‘outer zone of protection’. Indeed that may explain its otherwise curious
location, at least if seen as a “temple”. (yes, it did not take long for that
term to creep in, providing one more example of the way the attention can be
distracted from AFS onto something that doesn’t attempt to dismiss
“sky burial” but to sanitize (?) it with conjured-up images of ceremony and ritual
which may or may not have accompanied the practical business of disposing of
the dead.

The ‘distractions’ do not end there, given the several references to
Seahenge serving as a one-off site for disposing of a particular VIP, with
suggestions that Holme 2 having the buried remains which we’ll never know is
true or not, given the baffling decision not to excavate Holme 2. That is another
instance of blunting the impact of the AFS route, pre-emptively making
it seems as if Seahenge was not set up at some considerable cost and
inconvenience for serial ‘send-offs’ of scores of the deceased, not all of them
VIPs, maybe hundreds over a period of time that can only be guessed at (unless
there are multiple remains in that Holme 2 “burial mound” that has yet to warrant what some might consider a prematurely-
applied label).

So we have a
template, which could have been arrived at
purely by ab initio speculation (‘blue-sky thinking, aka scientific
hypothesising) and it matches up closely to Seahenge. So what’s the logical
next step? We’ve already said that “Seahenge” was a name coined to make a
questionable link with Stonehenge. Should it not have been the other way round?
Should no time have been wasted in seeing if Stonehenge was simply a
stone-built version of Seahenge that fitted the above template description,
differing only in the detail while serving precisely the same purpose – AFS?

In passing, here's a link to Ken West’s splendid posting on the Good Funeral Guide. There's also a thoughtful and informative pdf. Here’s a link to a
Google search in which Ken’s paper, which this blogger first chanced upon a
couple of months ago AFTER some months of suspecting Stonehenge as an
excarnation site. The papers that follow it are without exception – several -
on my own sites – either this this one, or my specialist Sussing Stonehenge etc, where I flagged up excarnation way back in 2012, and, finally comments I’ve placed on
Ancient-Origins and elsewhere, all proselytizing what I believe to be a new narrative,
arrived at independently by KenW and myself.
(Sorry to have to point this out, but it's needed to counter the suggestion made elsewhere that this blogger wittingly or even unwittingly peddles secondhand ideas. The internet does not support that contention. Links have been requested. Links have not been supplied.)

In passing, there’s a crucial difference between my thinking and Ken’s. First I
see a role for the gull especially, for reasons set out in previous postings,
and second I see those high lintels as purpose-built as bird perches par
excellence. It doesn’t stop there, returning to that template above for the
“ideal” sky burial site.

Stonehenge
,as the name implies, a henge, admittedly not an unambiguously non-defensive
structure, with the bank being inside the ditch instead of outside, like at
Avebury. Irrespective, when first constructed as an outer-perimeter for a
putative excarnation site, it would have given a great reassurance to visiting
birds, whether gulls, crows etc, given a ground-based predator would not only
have to negotiate them both, but would have been highly visible against the
gleaming white newly-excavated chalk.

What’s more the site would have been
illuminated immediately or shortly after sunrise in the midsummer months at
least, given the orientation, with the major entrance causeway, bridging the
ditch, facing the north-east, which is the direction from which the first rays
of dawn appear at the summer solstice. Yes, there may be an explanation for the
alignment of Stonehenge with respect to sunrise (or sunset) that has nothing to
do with supposed worship of the sun, and everything to do with making an
excarnation site highly conspicuous to birdlife at the crack of dawn, or maybe
the first hour or so later, depending on the precise month of the year. See this blogger's simple model, made using white flour and a bright electric torch.

So why stop
at Stonehenge? What about all the other
Neolithic and/or Bronze Age sites that have henges, ditches, banks, standing
stones, stone circles, simple timber
posts, maybe long- gone, leaving just postholes (Woodhenge etc), and maybe
linear standing alignments too (Carnac), with central tables that may or may
not still be present? What about more exotic sites, further afield, one’s in
which one can still perceive the three-part template of central table, perches
and outer zone of protection. I refer to Rujm el-Hiri in the Israeli-occupied
Golan Heights with its concentric stone walls, now largely collapsed to loose
rubble but still recognizable as circles, and to the celebrated if somewhat
controversial Gobekli Tepe in S.E. Anatolia (really as old as hunter-gatherer
era 10,000BC?) with its unusual and distinctive “T-shaped” pillars (bird
perches, not for gulls and crows but much bulkier vultures?). Excarnation has
been mooted at both those sites – which I personally find highly convincing,
while recognizing that the particular means in question does not lend itself to
confirmation by means of positive evidence, but more by lack of positive
evidence of alternatives like burial or cremation (i.e. no grave goods, no bones).

But let’s
return briefly to Stonehenge where there may be POSITIVE evidence. I refer to
cremated bone. There’s a vast number of fragments (said to be 50,000 or more) that were stowed
away in just one of the ‘Aubrey holes’
after being unearthed in the 1920s, being declined by museums and ‘put
back roughly whence they came’.

Crermated bones, Stonehenge. But don't assume whole body cremation.

Even if only from 40-50 or so individuals (from
memory) that’s a lot of cremation at a site that does not strike one
immediately as a crematorium, and not just because of the absence of a chimney.
Why install all that stonework if it was simply a place where funeral pyres were lit?
But here’s where there’s a lacuna in the litetarure, one that for some reason
is never commented upon.

What was being cremated? Whole bodies? Has that
proposition, or should one say, assumption ever been critically assessed? It
might not be easy to do so, but can’t be discarded for that reason. Is there
any other reason why there might have
been cremation at Stonehenge that is predicted, or predictable in principle,
from the excarnation template? Yes, it doesn’t bear with thinking about for
more than a second or two, but it seems fairly obvious that a site attendant
could not simply scoop up what was left behind by the gulls and present them as
a take-away package to the family (bearing in mind that unlike Seahenge,
disposal on an outgoing tide was not an option). Cremation could have been for
end-stage clean-up of largely or semi-excarnated remains. Were it possible to
demonstrate that the cremated bones at Stonehenge were from excarnated remains,
not whole bodies, one would have a smoking gun (well, a once smoking something)
that the site existed for excarnation, and that the evidence for that was not
simply from template-matching and negative evidence (no grave goods etc) but
some rare and not-to-be-lightly dismissed POSITIVE evidence.

As indicated
earlier, this blogger has taken 10 of the most iconic Neolithic/Bronze age
sites and evaluated each according to a standard checklist, based mainly on the
template, but including a column for any unusual features, like those copious
quantities of cremated bones at Stonehenge, with a view to asking whether they
might all of them, without exception be excarnation sites. That’s acknowledging,
one hastens toad, that others have
already been fingered as such, notably Rujm el Hiri in the Golan Heights by the
largely US-based archaeologist Rami Arav.
There may be others too (reading still in progress).

Unfortunately
the near-final table is too big for this site, except for those who can get
Blogger graphics to enlarge on their screens without too much loss of
definition.

Evaluation of 10 sites as prospective sky burial locations

(Clicking on the above image may enlarge it on some computers, using some browsers, but don't rely on it).

I’ll post it
here first, see above (see what I mean?) if only to show that the homework has been done. Each site ends
with a light-hearted ‘Peck ‘n’ Perch’ ranking, 1 to 5 stars, for the
benefit of itinerant birdlife wishing to commune with its own pre-history. No
prizes for guessing which tops the list, the Ritz of excarnation sites, with
its unique high lintels.I may try posting it to my specialist Stonehenge site,
though it’s in disgrace for recently deleting an entire posting composed online
when I hit the Send key. (This one is being composed in Word, once bitten twice
shy).

Finally, here’s a graphic
that summarises this retired blogging scientist’s final considered view on the
10 sites selected.

(Click to enlarge) 10 iconic sites, all fitting to a greater or lesser degree the expected profile of a "sky burial" site, i.e. avian-facilitated skeletonization

Listed sites:

1. Avebury Henge and Stone Circles, UK

2. King Stone, Rollright Stones, UK.

3. Stonehenge, Wiltshire, UK

4. Carnac, Brittany, France.

5. Seahenge, Holme, Norfolk, UK

6. Arbor Low, Derbyshire, UK

7. Rujm el-Hiri, Golan Heights, Israeli-occupied Syria.

8. Ring of Brodgar, Orkney, Scotland, UK

9. Gobekli Tepe, SE Turkey.

10.Woodhenge (artist's reconstruction), Wiltshire, UK

They were ALL without exception excarnation sites, because
SKY BURIAL in Neolithic times was considered the done thing, the decreed norm
across a broad swathe of the globe, the decent send-off that ensured
liberation of the soul from the mortal remains. There was liberation to
the sky, as indicated, and, at least for coastal sites, probably release of the
final excarnated remains to the sea as well (Ring of Brodgar, Seahenge, Carnac).
Takeaway option (by grieving relatives) or onsite-interment of cremated remains served as an alternative
end- step at inland sites. The important thing to note is the relative paucity of human remains at standing stone sites, sufficient to mark then out as "a place of the dead" or similar label, but providing little evidence of wholesale burial, and only partial interment of cremated remains (suggesting widespread disposal of ashes etc into the sea or nearest river, as others before me have flagged up elsewhere on many occasions). As stated earlier, always take on board the NEGATIVE as well as positive evidence.

08:10 There's still some tidying up still to be done here, typos to be corrected, rephrasing, missing links to other sites, decisions on whether to keep this or that sentence or paragraph. But I'm in central London today to see UCL*- affilated Barney Harris's project at Gordon Squareto see how many people are needed to lift a 1 tonne megalith. See previous posting with link to Evening Standard article and my comment. Decision: since I'm setting off to the station shortly, and will be out most of the day, I'll hit the SEND button shortly, and then check back late afternoon to see if there are any comments (unlikely, but one never knows one's luck).

*This blogger/retired biomedial scientist has an enduring soft spot for UCL, it being where he acquired his MSc degree in Biochemistry, and which he learned a while ago also stores his PhD thesis.

Appendix: the evolving template for AFS - British style - based on local scavenger birds, gulls, crows etc - not vultures.

The heart of the AFS centre - perches convenient for a centre feeding station . But there had to be some kind of protection against predators, rival ground-based scavengers etc.

Here's the Seahenge solution, where a (no doubt) carefully chosen location a short way inland in what is believed to have been a SALT MARSH originally provided the necessary protection.

Note too that at Seahenge there were no gaps between the timber posts, except maybe at an entrance to the inner circle (not shown). The sizeable number of posts (some 50) were butted up, a feasible option when the central area is kept relatively small.

Here's the generic template, suited to all locations, inland ones included, one in which there's an outer "ring ofprotection". The latter gives the birds a feeling of assurance they can feed safely without having nervously to be looking over their shoulders the whole time

The white toroidal ring can be a ditch, a bank, or a combination of the two, i.e. henge comprising excavated ditch and bank of spoil.

The big advantage of a raised bank is that it acts as a sight-screen. Birds approaching on the wing can see the central feeding table. Ground-based scavengers can't.

Let's stop here for now, with Here's a possible prototype for Avebury, Stonehenge, Arbor Low etc, one in which the henge serves as protection (outer or inner bank), with a causewayed access, and, in the case of Stonehenge that causeway facing north-east, so as to illuminate the central enclosure at or shortly after sunrise in the summer months.

-

We are now one step closer to the upmarket Stonehenge design. Why? Answer: look closely and one can see that lintels have been added, making bridges between the tops of the timber posts, greatly increasing the 'bird-perching capacity'.

Here's the next stage of evolution towards Stonehenge, shown schematically.

Away
with those timber posts, so rustic-looking, so hard to keep clean. Go
for something more permanent, namely stone. But it has to be non-porous
stone, easy to keep clean. Oh dear, the local sarsen is porous sandstone. Use bluestone
instead (igneous, non-porous dolerite etc). But that means going all
the way to west Wales, to a certain location, unless there happens to be some lying around locally. ;-) Oh well.

Pleased to announce that I have gained permission for the two stone circles
and stone row at Leskernick to be excavated by members of my TimeSeekers
volunteer clearance group.
We will be clearing the three sites and re-exposing all of the recumbent and
buried standing stones and those in the stone row as from early June.
On completion we will carry out a Survey and submit a Field Report and
following that an application will be submitted to Schedule the entire site
including the adjacent Bronze-Age settlement on Leskernick Hill.

Regards

Roy

Here's my instant research
(being unfamiliar with that particular site)

“The
settlement is associated with an impressive
ceremonial or ritual landscape... In the open moorland to the south-east of
the settlement are two stone circles
with a large cairn between the two, making an approximately straight alignment;
flanking the cairn is a stone row which leads off to the east.... Within
the circle but slightly off-centre lies a large whale-back stone, possibly
a natural feature but more likely a standing stone that has either fallen or been deliberately laid flat when the circle went
out of use. The tallest stones of the circle appear to face uphill towards
the settlement which, in this direction, seems to be set at a respectful distance, to better separate the secular from the
ritual space. This suggests that the easterly part of the settlement at
least is either contemporary with or post-dates the stone circles. In either event the ritual monuments seem
to have continued to provide an important symbolic focus.”

Nope. There’s nothing, absolutely nothing symbolic
about the stone circle and its “slightly off-centre” large whale-back stone, or as I would say, "feeding table".Sure, it’s “impressive
ceremonial or ritual landscape” - if that’s how one wishes to describe a strictly
utilitarian ‘sky burial’ site.

Yup, it's almost certainly a SKY BURIAL site. It ticks the important boxes as regards location, design etc. IT FITS THE TEMPLATE.

Thanks RoyG for providing example No.11. I bet there's plenty more where it came from, being described in somewhat vacuous terms as "ritual" or "symbolic" landscape, while in reality serving a practical down-to- earth function.

I rest my case.

Thursday May 26, 10:50

Google Search truly is the pits as this screen shot from a few minutes ago demonstrates (this blogger having adopted the unique monicker 'sciencebod' some 7 years ago when setting up this site).

This blogger's problems with Google Search go way back - like finding his original discoveries and content only got seen (at second hand) thanks to repeated cover versions by another US-based site, renowned for its genteel pirating (and systematic blunting of anti-authenticity message)and one moreover packed with agenda-driven pro- Shroud authenticity commenters (and fund-raisers).That site is and was invariably near the top of Page 1 of returns despite having generated no original research of its own and having closed down some 5 months ago, taking no further comments).

Yesterday , the above site was languishing on Page 8 of Google UK listings under (shroud of turin) despite my having put over 300 postings onto the web over a 4 year period, culminating in the above. See title: it provides after an intensive programme of hands-on experimentation, a simple solution to the so-called enigma of the TS image - a contact imprint that after washing survives (just!) as faint 'pseudo-photographic' negative image with 3D-enhancibilty in modern computer software Ingenious medieval forgery ? Yes. Enigmatic 2000 year old image of the founder of Christianity? No..

I repeat Google. You are the pits, seen from this long-time blogger's perspective. Your entire 'business model', centred as it is almost assuredly on a post-curated algorithm, is clearly designed primarily to serve you and your e-commerce interests. You are anti- the world of ideas (well, the ones that your army of curators see as troublesome or potentially dangerous to your e-commerce interests).

The present posting was shown briefly on a Google search under (stonehenge), initially under "Past Hour", and then, just over an hour later, under "Past 24 hours":

It then suddenly disappeared, shortly after two visits from Google HQ (Mountain Ash) with IP numbers differing only in the final digit being displayed on my sitemeter (saved!) and has not reappeared. How many folk were aware that Google's search results are clearly not based solely as we've been led to believe on an impartial, objective pre-programmed algorithm, that they are clearly being "curated" - read CENSORED - by a human being?

Why is this posting, one of the most important I've ever produced in some 10 years of blogging, being CENSORED for those searching simply under Stonehenge? What right has a search engine to CENSOR my postings based I believe on sound and extensive scholarship?

I shan't be responding to it there, and indeed will be posting no more comments to that 'trainspotters' site, one that's about as far removed from the world of ideas as is possible to imagine.

Here's a detailed and considered reply:

1.There is no vendetta, as will be seen. There is strong
disapproval of that site and its response to a NEW theory (I repeat, NEW).

2. When I first requested exposure of my theory on Neolithic Portal, the initial response seemed promising. But I then found my prepared piece
wrongly allocated to a “Mystery” category (no, it’s anti-mystery). Worse still, much worse, it
was relegated to Thiird Division on the
page, one that fails to flag up the arrival of new comments. So my request for
visibility (denied to me by the commerce-obsessed Google) resulted in
near-invisibility.

3. As if that were not bad enough, dismissive comments appeared immediately from the site owner and his team saying
I was being over- simplistic (no specific reasons given as to why) and that “it’s
all been said before” (no links given when challenged to back up that totally unwarranted, out-or-order assertion).

4. In fact my "sky burial" theory hasn’t been said before, except for Ken West’s
article in the Good Funeral Guide and a related pdf, both of which have been
acknowledged. If it has been said
before, then it’s totally invisible to the Google search engine, as anyone can
confirm for themselves by searching under (stonehenge) followed by (excarnation) or (sky burial).

5. It’s now 4 years since I first proposed that Neolithic
Wiltshire had been a site for excarnation, with the focus initially on
pigs, Durrington Walls and Silbury Hill, So why
suggest my views are “tongue in cheek”. My
entirely original thinking on Silbury Hill appeared as a feature not so long ago
on the Ancient-Origins site, with neither editors nor commentators suggesting
my views were “tongue in cheek”. Show me
where I have given the slightest hint that I don’t wish to be taken too seriously.

6. The problem I have, with Google, and now Neolithic
Portal, is that neither seems to understand that I am deadly serious in regarding
most if not all stone circles, Avebury and Stonehenge included, as purpose-built sites for soul-liberating pre-Christian Neolithic
or Bronze Age sky burial. Yes, they remove some of the (money-spinning) mystery, but not all.

7. Google simply fails to list my postings, or even my “Sussing Stonehenge and Silbury Hill ... " SITE , see link below,
which appears nowhere in a Google search for either of those two locations.

Here's the site Google doesn't want you to know about when searching under "stonehenge" OR "silbury hill"

Now contrast with the no-new-ideas, have-your-credit-card ready Neolithic Portal site which appears on Page 3 of returns for Silbury Hill, and Page 8 for Stonehenge.

8. Why is Google ignoring me? Answer: because unlike
Neolithic Portal I am not plugged into its manic e-commerce network of click-and-pay.
I exist purely to disseminate new and dare one say uninhibited, non-sensibility sparing thinking re excarnation (Yes. NEW).

9. So why is Neolithic Portal so keen to marginalize me and
my NEW thinking? Answers on a postcard please,

10. If those folk at Neolithic Portal wereto
desist from sitting in judgement on those whom they haven’t met and don’t know, and
in all probability have merely skimmed one's extensive output, in this instance over 4 years, then maybe they
wouldn’t be so ready to bandy around their dismissive putdowns, far less make the kind of character
attack that is implied by casual
deployment of term “vendetta”. Outspoken
criticism of that site and its modus operandi is not, repeat NOT, a personal
vendetta. As for Google, my unflattering views are based on some 10 years of close observation as a blogger. I have nothing
personally to gain, and possibly a lot to lose, by deciding to air them at this
time, while the Google gun is still smoking. (Yes, I and my sitemeter are monitoring all your visits Google. If you can’t be bothered to list my non-commercial sites in simple search returns ("Stonehenge", "Silbury Hill" etc ) and indeed continue
to blacklist them, then kindly quit snooping around).

Each time you click on one of those Google ads in your search returns, the placer of that ad gets charged 10p, whether you purchase or not.

The central 'altar stone' at Stonehenge (see Comments). This blogger suspects that the longitudinal groove was made as a recess into which to place a stout pole, or even dozens of bound canes, securely tied in place by multiple windings of rope or netting. Why? As an aid to human transport - from Wales! That central yoke would then have been the basis for a larger framework that allowed scores, probably hundreds of carriers to be inserted.

(Note too the handly notch on the right - ideal for making a non-slip attachment point for rope etc).

So what does the 50 or so page English Heritage guide to Stonehenge have to say about the Altar Stone? Answer: precious little. It's not even labelled on the introductory diagram (unlike the Heel Stone, Slaughter Stone and Station Stone) nor is it so much as hinted there is a centrepiece stone, i.e. a focal point for everything else. And here, wait for it, is the text in its entirety relating to the Altar Stone:

Finally, at the closed end of the innermost horseshoe, in the shadow of the tallest trilithon and now partly buried between its fallen upright, lies a stone known as the Altar Stone. This is the largest of the non-sarsen stones, a greenish sandstone from south Wales.

Er, yes, do please continue EH... No? Is that all? Tell me EH, do you have some kind of problem with that Altar Stone? Don't tell me that you too are into the business of 'curating out'... Isn't that Altar stone where a body would have been laid out for the benefit of the waiting birds, perched safe and sound, out of harm's way, on those high lintels?

18:30 Saturday May 28

Hallelujah! This posting has finally reappeared on Page 7 under a Google Curate search for (stonehenge), Past Week, having appeared briefly on Monday (Past 24hrs) and then disappearing from sight. Will it make it to the Past Month listing in two days time, or again be 'curated out'. We shall see.

Update: Monday May 30

It's exactly a week since I put up this posting, and no, it did not transfer from Google's listing under Stonehenge, Past Week to Past Month. In fact, it appeared only briefly under Past Week before disappearing completely off Google's radar screen. I would recommend a visit to Wikipedia's page on "Search Engines" to see what it says about the various filters and bubbles that are now an intrinsic part of Google Curate. But if you're not on Google, you might as well not exist, to quote the old internet saw.

So where does this blogger go from here? There's no point putting up new postings, with new data that may or may not support the BIg Idea (yes. let's not hide lights under bushels - the notion that standing stones, especially in circles, implies Neolithic Brit-style 'sky burial' has to be regarded as a Big Game-Changing Idea). What the tourists will think is anyone's guess!

But if I keep adding material here, this posting becomes too long and intimidating to a new visitor scrolling down. So what's the solution? Watch this space. (Back to now cleaning the patio stones. Forget about proprietary algicides, by the way - they are a waste of time and money. Get yourself some thick bleach, paint it on, cover with a polythene sheet and leave for three or more hours. When you return you will have pristine-looking slabs without a trace of sooty black discoloration to be seen!).

Foretaste of my new strategy: goto this posting on my specialist Stonehenge/Silbury Hill site. Scroll down to the end. Note the added "Archive". I will be discussing the first three pix, added just a short while ago, from a splendid paper by Jenny Cataroche and Rebecca Gowland, purchased online this morning I might add, describing their findings re cremated bone at a Guernsey site.

Update: Tuesday, May 31 2016

Yup, can't believe my good fortune in discovering this gold mine of a paper:

"Flesh, fire and funerary remains from the Neolithic site of La Varde, Guernsey:Investigations past and present" authored by the two researchers named above.

It's one a several papers in a volume edited by Prof.Tim Thompson of Teesside University, Middlesborough, entitled: "The Archaeology of Cremation, Burned Human Remains in Funerary Studies. (Certain pages are available for free on Google Books).

Why am I so elated? Because those two ladies set out evidence from museum specimens of bones from the impressive Passage Tomb at La Varde, adjacent to a golf course, that they were (a) cremated bone and, guess what, DE-FLESHED by some means (unspecified) prior to cremation.

Quote from their paper (my underlining):

"Very few of the burnt bones/fragments were oxidized to white
and none showed evidence of the shrinkage, deformation or curved U-shaped
fissuring that typically signal the high intensity burning of fleshed bodies
(refs). Detectable fractures were in all cases linear, and transverse
splintering was noted in several of the larger fragments (ref to Fig). These
are features typically seen in cases where ‘dry’ bones have been burnt
subsequent to the total, or near-total, decomposition of the soft tissues
(refs).Rather than indicating standard cremation this evidence argues in favour
of one or more burning events, in which the bones of deceased individuals were
burnt post mortem and once decomposition was at a very advanced stage".

On reading the paper, I made two predictions, first that there would be a stone circle near that tomb (there being no mention of that in the paper) and second, there might be pitting or pock marks on those bones suggestive of having been picked at pre-cremation by scavenger birds.

Second, there is indeed pitting on a photograph of a bone in the Cataroche/Gowland paper. It's labelled "Archive 3" on my other site (see link above). OK, that pitting could be the result of something other than the beaks of birds, but that's not the key issue right now. In applying the scientific method, one's hypotheses should be accompanied by predictions. I've made two that are both borne out. The problem would have been if either had not been confirmed, NOT that there might be alternative explanations...

I look forward to hearing the views of the three aforementioned 'cremation' experts before adding more to this already overlong posting. I'm attaching just enough to give a flavour of what is turning out to be one of the most exciting research projects that I have ever tackled. Yes, with stone circles as sites for sky burial one is (amazingly) stumbling upon virgin territory where academic research is concerned. How different that is (and refreshing) from this blogger's 4 year sojourn in Turin Shroud research where, from the word go, one found oneself up against determined opposition, intent on silencing one from the outset. . (Don't expect to find me on an entry level Google search under "shroud of turin", but add extra terms like "white flour" or "oven-roasted" or "wet linen" and my final imprinting flour-assisted scorch model then appears as if by magic. Four years work, hundreds, yes HUNDREDS of postings, but I'm still below Google's radar on a simple (shoud of turin) search. There be something rotten in the state of Denmark California, but as to how and why - well, there are some tentative conclusions emerging from my ongoing research, ones that reveal some interesting inconsistencies when I compare Google Curate Search with another search engine whose selling point is that it does NOT tamper with curate or otherwise 'filter' the results to meet perceived interests.).

Now notice the first three returns, all of which have scored out my first two search terms, a crass and shameless ruse for substituting modern day commercial products for a historical enquiry.

This is just laughable. Google is supposed to be a search engine, the premier search engine on the entire planet. Yet here it is, thowing one's search terms back in one's face, inserting covert e-commerce.

Update, June 1, 2016

I've decided to change the title of this posting. It was originally:

"It's time to get real about Stonehenge and other stone circles - based on their affinity with the 'Seahenge' template"

Yup, too long, and arguably too nerdish, but it was chosen to let folk in gently to the 'excarnation' role of Stonehenge, on the assumption that the posting would be visible in Google Search under STONEHENGE (pure and simple). But given it's now abundantly clear that my posting has been de-listedby Google Curate, with little doubt in this blogger's mind as to the reasons why, then there's no need any longer to pussyfoot around.

The new title, as of today, is simply:

It's time to get real about Stonehenge - Britain's premier 'SKY BURIAL' site

Quote from Godfather 4:

"Que? My predecessors' way of doing things is over, it's
finished. Even they know that. I mean, in five years the Google Family is
going to be completely illegitimate. Distrust me. That's all I can tell you about my
business..."

There's a simple straightforward explanation for Calanais, Stonehenge, 'Seahenge' and all those other Neolithic standing stones or timbers, and it's now't to do with those 'ritual landscapes' so beloved of the grant-hungry archaeological establishment forever spinning their waffly fantasies.

They were quite simply sites for naturalistic disposal of the dead via 'sky burial', aka excarnation via scavenger birdlife, or as I prefer to call it, AFS (avian-facilitated skeletonization). The stone or timber pillars or poles served as perches where the birds (probably adaptable gulls for the most part) could feel safe and secure from ground-based predators. AFS was often followed by cremation of the partially excarnated bones (why else would the buried bones at Stonehenge and elsewhere be CREMATED bone?).

1. Causewayed enclosure- multifunctional, being demarcation of homestead territory, with funeral facility at one end, pushed to one side, probably screened, maybe whole body cremation with or without prior excarnation via different methods one can only guess at.
2. Henges – first step towards specialized avian facilitated skeletonization, just one means of arm’s length excarnation, with ‘artificial white cliffs’ designed to attract voracious gulls from afar; north-east opening ensures the interior is brighty illuminated at or shortly after sunrise. Central ‘altar’. (Forget those summer and winter solstices, good idea initially but all-too-typical unscientific failure to follow through with critical corroborative evidence, science merging imperceptibly into pseudoscience – then hand-me-down dogma).
3. Arguably henge-like circles of stone in the Golan Heights (Rujm-el-Hiri, “Stonehenge of the Levant” ) also suggested to play an excarnation role.

4. The Seahenge model, isolated coastal salt marsh, serial use over years or decades – too meticulously-built and isolated to be regarded as a one-off funeral of a celebrity figure (Sorry Tim). Inverted tree stump arguably much too large and unwieldy for a single offering.
5. Addition of multiple timber posts to henges, sometimes circles but not always (so one should not rush into alignment with sun and solstices, or moon either). Regard the posts as perches for gulls and/or other voracious avian species, albeit a less than efficient scavenger than the continental vulture..
6. Addition of structures like that close to Durrington Walls (“Countess Farm”/”mortuary house”/ “house of dead”) – multiple posts within screened dwelling – arguably no roof – again a site for specialized AFS (excarnation arguably too non-specific a term given the different agents – microorganisms, birds, rodents, foxes, wolves and other land-based carnivores, man-made flints and knives ).

Here are two snapshots I took May 2012 at Stonehenge. (They are needed to accompany my compromise proposal for screening the site from the A303 (most direct route from London to Devon and Cornwall) which I'll flag up first to Timothy Daw's sarsen.org site).

Traffic coming down the slope towards Stonehenge from London direction

See how close the A303 road is to the Stonehenge site. (Is it any wonder that drivers slow down and gawp, creating tailbacks?)

Addendum: March 16, 2018 I've decided to add this latest image of mine as an update to ALL my Stonehenge postings (some 24 in all, here and on my specialist Stonehenge site). Why not – since it’s my considered answer to the ‘mystery’ of the monument’s peculiar architecture, the conclusion to some 6 years of deliberation?

I say Stonehenge was designed as a giant bird perch, a ceremonial monument dedicated to ‘sky burial’, i.e. soul release from mortal remains to the heavens via AFS (avian-facilitated skeletonization, considered the height of fashion (and practicality) in Neolithic-era 2500BC! The stripped remains were then cremated, so an apt description of Stonehenge might, as previously suggested, be PRE-CREMATORIUM.

The sills of the inner 5 trilithons have been colour-coded yellow, while pink has been used to partially colour-code the outer stone circle (believed to have once been continuous as shown in this artist's impression from an English Heritage site). In addition to the colour-coding, I've also added a token gull (sorry it's upside down!).

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About Me

Colin Berry, aka sciencebod, is a retired PhD researcher/teacher/academic who has worked in industry, medical schools, schools, food and biomedical research (mainly in the UK, but also in W.Africa and the United States). He's best known for his work on RESISTANT STARCH, recently described as "the trendiest form of dietary fibre".
See also his specialist Shroud of Turin blog on www.shroudofturinwithoutallthehype.wordpress.com
with over 200 postings to date.

Create one's own blog (age, class, gender no barrier)

It's really quite straightforward. All one has to do is to click on the photograph with that nice young man. One can then be part of the frightfully interesting Blogger community in just a couple of jiffs.

Acknowledgment

What's the latest on the LHC?

LHC gets warning system upgrade : BBC 28 September 2009

Self-organization

From wiki entry on SELF ORGANIZATION: "As a result, processes considered part of thermodynamically open systems, such as biological processes that are constantly receiving, transforming and dissipating chemical energy (and even the earth itself which is constantly receiving and dissipating solar energy), can and do exhibit properties of self organization far from thermodynamic equilibrium."

How far away should your off-licence be for a bottle of wine to be energy-neutral?

What do these two have in common?

Answer: both arrived in this world about the same time. Sir Isaac Newton was born on 4th Jan 1643 (new style*). The Taj Mahal had a 20 year gestation period, centred on approximately the same year. Click on piccy for an older post .* Or Christmas Day, 1642, depending which dating system one uses.

Is interstellar space travel feasible?

The nearest star (more correctly, star system, since it's 3 stars, a binary and a smaller satellite star) is Alpha Centauri. The average distance from Earth is 4.3 light years. Suppose technology allows us one day to achieve an interstellar cruising speed of half the speed of light. A comfortable acceleration of g (simulating Earth's gravity) would take a year, with another year to slow down comfortably. The entire journey from Earth would take a minimum of 10 years approximately. Having arrived at one's destination, it would take 4.3 years to send a radio postcard (" Hello Mum and Dad. Have arrived safely, and am now looking for a habitable planet. Am hoping it's hiding behind Proxima. Have looked everywhere else... Would die for some Cheddar cheese... ")

Watch this space

It's a cheap and cheerful form of transcendental meditation.(experimenting with settings, actually)

What causes weather?

Could you answer that question in just 7 words, ie " weather is due to...? Need some help, " Weather is due to t- - u - - - - - - h - - - - - - o - t - - E- - - -'s s - - - - - - ." The National Curriculum (England and Wales) does have its uses, but there are many more such simple principles, expressed in a minimum of words, that could be usefully incorporated.

"Had there been a Beginning (there wasn't, as it happens), there would initially have been complete Nothingness. But just as Nature abhors a vacuum, it's totally gutted at the thought of Nothingness. I mean to say - how far does Nothingness extend, assuming it has one of more dimensions? It can't extend for an infinite distance, since that would be a physical impossibility. Nothingness, to avoid having infinite reach, coils up on itself to acquire finite dimensions. In so doing, it becomes Somethingness, which has a spring-like potential energy - the total energy in fact of the Universe.

From that potential energy, present in what we now call space, or space-time, which is anything but empty, is spawned all sub-atomic particles - both matter and antimatter. When those particles collide, they mutually annihilate to create photons.

The reverse can also happen under extreme conditions - two photons can collide to create matter and anti-matter. It is potential energy in the spring-coiled Universe that is our "Dark Energy. It may or may not have mass depending on conditions.

A moment when it has no mass is the instant of the Big Bang. Let me briefly explain. An oscillating universe switches between Big Bang and Big Crunch. With the latter gravitation pulls everything into a super blackhole which then becomes a singularity - a massively dense point in space-time.

What prevents it becoming infinitely small - a physical impossibility? Answer: friction. As the sub-atomic plasma contracts and grinds, heat is generated which cannot escape - being a black hole. The temperature rises, ie particles in the plasma move faster and faster. When they reach their maximum velocity - the speed of light- all particles are suddenly transformed into photons, which as we know have no true mass(at least, no rest mass: any mass they have is purely relativistic due to their speed).

Once the entire Universe is a super-concentration of photons, all the gravitational forces in the singularity collapse to zero, or nearly so, and the entire thing blows apart - a new Big Bang, to create yet another cycle (inflation, Big Crunch, implosion etc). The Big Bang creates not just sub-atomic particles - from photon-photon collisions, but space-time itself. To reiterate: that space-time is always suffused with the stored potential energy of our curled-up dimensions (Dark Energy)."